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The Science of Homeopathy – page 210

pathic remedies, and a definite deterioration ensues. What is going on? Is some kind of complex aggravation occurring? Has one remedy pro- duced a healing crisis while another is antidoting any previous prog- ress which might have been made? Is one remedy acting within a few days, while another is acting after a week? Is the patient unusually sensitive to one particular substance? And if so, which substance is it? If the aggravation is judged to be truly serious, how does one go about finding the next remedy that will save the patient?
Conversely, suppose a patient is given a combination of six rem- edies, and definite improvement occurs over a period of three months. Which medicine produced the improvement? If the improvement proves to be only temporary, how might a related follow-up remedy be chosen? Suppose the active remedy was given in a potency too low for permanent cure, how would one then decide which remedy to give in a higher potency?
There are even further questions. If remedies are proven in the con- text of separate, carefully-conducted provings, what would happen if they are combined? Would the resulting action be merely a mixture of the separate provings, a “sum of the parts”? Or would the result be a drastically different symptom picture? No provings have ever been conducted on combination remedies, so how can anyone predict what set of symptoms such combinations could cure?
The practice of giving combinations of remedies obviously violates all of the fundamental laws of homeopathy – and common sense as well. Nevertheless, it is common practice in some parts of the world. Some homeopaths take a case, cannot see a medicine covering the totality of symptoms, and so they create a combination of medicines, each of which (according to their estimation) covers a fragment of the case. To make matters worse, it is common practice in such circles to mix potency levels as well, and even to give certain remedies at one time of day and others at other times of day. As the reader of this book now knows very well, the process of homeopathy is to find the remedy with the vibrational frequency most closely matching the resonant fre- quency of the defense mechanism of the patient. Combination prescrib- ing, in this context, would be analogous to trying to create harmony by tuning six different radios to separate stations simultaneously in the hopes of creating a symphony.
Such practice can only create complete chaos, and indeed some of the most pitiable cases in homeopathic practice are those who have undergone years of such chaotic treatment. The defense mechanism of such patients is so disturbed that it is often completely impossible to restore their health to even the level prior to such prescribing, let alone